• https://www.dead.net/features/gd-radio-hour/grateful-dead-hour-no-361
    Grateful Dead Hour no. 361

    Week of August 21, 1995

    Since this feature was inaugurated a little over a year ago, I have been getting requests to post the series of programs I produced in 1995 following Jerry Garcia's untimely passing.

    Here is the first of those shows, which includes the memorial ceremony that was held at the Polo Field in Golden Gate Park on August 13, four days after Jerry died.

    The 2/18/71 "Dark Star Jam" became known as "Beautiful Jam" when it was included in the boxed set So Many Roads (1965-1995). It takes the band from the first-ever live performance of "Wharf Rat" into the second verse of "Dark Star," and it remains to this day one of the most beautiful passages of Grateful Dead improvisation I have ever heard.

    - DG

     P.S.  A reader did the research about the poem Paul Kantner read and posted the information below. It's "For The Good Of All" by Otto Rene Castillo. Paul confirmed this in email today, too.

     

    8/13/95 Golden Gate Park, San Francisco
    MEMORIAL CEREMONY for Jerry Garcia

    Grateful Dead 3/18/95 Spectrum, Philadelphia
    IT'S ALL TOO MUCH->
    IKO IKO

    Grateful Dead 2/18/71 Capitol Theatre, Portchester NY
    DARK STAR JAM

    You can browse or search the Grateful Dead Hour program logs on the GD Hour web site. Let me know if there's a particular program you'd like to hear, and feel free to post requests and comments here or by email to gdhour@dead.net

    Thanks for listening!
    David Gans
    gdhour@dead.net

    Listen Now

    12699
20 comments
sort by
Recent
Reset
Items displayed
  • Default Avatar
    dgans
    14 years 3 months ago
    Memorial ceremony
    I just wanted to bump this program up into the "recent" list. It includes the memorial for Jerry at Golden Gate Park on 8/13/95. Gans/GD Hour blog
    GD Hour station list
  • tejastiger61
    16 years 2 months ago
    I still can hardly belive he's gone.
    This is the musical nourishment my soul needs. This particular show is the essence of what it was to have gone along on the ride. It is still delivering or can can deliver cool, clear , beautiful memories of the sunny slopes of long ago.
  • Default Avatar
    redeemer
    16 years 2 months ago
    never forget that day...
    ...my senior year of high school, and I was fortunate to have been catching the dead whenever they came to the NY area for the past four years. I was cooking pasta and my little sister walked into the kitchen and said, "hey, that guitar player you like just died." I knew immediately. I turned off the stove and walked into the living room where my sister was watching MTV, and there was Kurt Loder giving the news. Not sure what to do, I got in my car, lit a cigarette and just started driving the back roads through the woods. I put on 92.3 K-Rock, which was playing live dead all day, and in between songs taking phone calls of people expressing their sadness and gratitude. I parked by a small pond and cried listening to Brokedown Palace. Thank you for playing this memorial which I am hearing for the first time. And I agree that the Dark Star transition from 71 absolutely sings Jerry's spirit... So grateful, everyday.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 6 months

Week of August 21, 1995

Since this feature was inaugurated a little over a year ago, I have been getting requests to post the series of programs I produced in 1995 following Jerry Garcia's untimely passing.

Here is the first of those shows, which includes the memorial ceremony that was held at the Polo Field in Golden Gate Park on August 13, four days after Jerry died.

The 2/18/71 "Dark Star Jam" became known as "Beautiful Jam" when it was included in the boxed set So Many Roads (1965-1995). It takes the band from the first-ever live performance of "Wharf Rat" into the second verse of "Dark Star," and it remains to this day one of the most beautiful passages of Grateful Dead improvisation I have ever heard.

- DG

 P.S.  A reader did the research about the poem Paul Kantner read and posted the information below. It's "For The Good Of All" by Otto Rene Castillo. Paul confirmed this in email today, too.

 

8/13/95 Golden Gate Park, San Francisco
MEMORIAL CEREMONY for Jerry Garcia

Grateful Dead 3/18/95 Spectrum, Philadelphia
IT'S ALL TOO MUCH->
IKO IKO

Grateful Dead 2/18/71 Capitol Theatre, Portchester NY
DARK STAR JAM

You can browse or search the Grateful Dead Hour program logs on the GD Hour web site. Let me know if there's a particular program you'd like to hear, and feel free to post requests and comments here or by email to gdhour@dead.net

Thanks for listening!
David Gans
gdhour@dead.net

Listen Now

Display on homepage featured list
Off
StreamOS MP3 URL
https://sos2208.akamaized.net/download/rhino/gdead/gdhour/gdh361_podcast.mp3
Feature type

dead comment

user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

and beautiful show. Thanks for always being there for us, David Gans. "The need for mystery is greater than the need for an answer." - Ken Kesey
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 2 months
Permalink

Thanks so much David for posting this. I have been wanting to hear Paul Kantner read that poem again for many years. Just this week I went looking for it online, but could not find the actual poem anywhere. I did find out however that a few lines from that poem are lifted and put in a Jefferson Airplane tune (couldnt tell ya the tune) . Do you happen to know the name of the author of that poem? Does God look down on the boys in the barroom Mainly forsaken but surely not judged? Jacks, kings, and aces, their faces in wine Do Lord deliver our kind
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

I certainly am grateful to hear this show. THANK YOU David for sharing it ... Jerry was one of the most important american artist. The world is not the same since august 9th 1995. let his memory shine ! peace on earth
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 2 months
Permalink

I remember hearing this show for the first time August 1995, not too long after the event. I was listening to 88.5 WXPN Philadelphia on a Sunday night, driving in my car and I had to pull into a parking lot of a mall, and I just cried and cried. The hurt was so intense to know that a musician who I never met in person, but knew on a very deep intense musical level and rather personal, had ceased life as I know it. He lives on in his music, both as a member of Grateful Dead or as a solo artist, and as an visual artist too. I love his painting styles too. When WXPN had their next pledge drive, I began to support 'XPN. Later, a friend gave me noisy cassettes of this program and a later Grateful Dead Hour program. It was after listening again several time I was able to heal from the pain of loss.Again, David, Thank you!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

For sharing this show Our Box of Rain runneth over
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 2 months
Permalink

GG Park was so beautiful and difficult that day. Bob's speech moved me because of all the members of the band, he seemed to be the least resigned at the moment he spoke. It was so hard to leave the Polo Fields that day, fearing I would never be at a gathering like that again...but the wheel has kept turning, not least and not only through the music.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

This is great antidote to the caustic drivel from Sarah Palin and others in St. Paul this evening. At least now my tears have some joy and hope in them. Thanks David, this was moving.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 2 months
Permalink

Well, I listened to this 3 times today...brings back alot of memories..so i dug around some more and found the poem, of all places on the Jefferson Airplane website read it here if you like...I loved it when he read it for Bill, and then for Jerry as well. http://www.jeffersonstarshipsf.com/poetry5.htm its written by a Guatemalan revolutionary named Otto-Rene Castillo who was run out of Guatemala in the 50's by the CIA's dictator, Jacobo Arbenz. The Jeff Airplane lifted some of the lines to this poem and included it in "The Wheel (For Nora and Nicaragua)" a tune on album they put out in 89 that im not familiar with. Thank you so much for posting this David. Ill never forget danicing and spinning to all the music played at the end of the memorial and thinking I will never dance with these people again. Some dancers who were my friends, and some who I had danced with so many times sharing this intimate experience without ever sharing a word. There are many who I still see to this day here and there, but many, many faces from tour that I never saw again. Does God look down on the boys in the barroom Mainly forsaken but surely not judged? Jacks, kings, and aces, their faces in wine Do Lord deliver our kind
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

OK... I was moved (in the wrong direction) after that speech tonight: I sat there and was pretty bummed at what could be the ignorance of what might come to be. So I took a little drive around the neighborhood and threw on "Eyes" from Fall of 73... And I began to feel a whole lot better. The beauty, that BASS, that guitar and the movement. Total hand movement twirling in the car (yeah, we've all done it)... I thought, "it will be OK, you're just being too dramatic about it all..." Which is not my style. I come home and my 16-year old son walks up and says, "Dad, you must be bummed about something because you had 'Mags' blasting out of your speakers when you drove up." Um, yes... "Eyes" had ended and after a few great interludes... "Mags" was indeed on. I explained that it was kind of a weird night, watching the RNC and "I had to float off for a while, get in touch with my own reality and now I feel much better." Then I come across the post by Antidote and I'm thinking... "Wow, someone else was dealing with this same thing tonight... In the same way... AWESOME!" I'm part of a Dead-Thread that has people on it from across the country. We talk about politics, Dead, life, current events, etc... Tonight was no different... Our thread was lit with comments... Glad I took the drive, glad I came here and found someone else a little disturbed by what we saw tonight. So thanks Antidote... Yes, we are everywhere... Thanks all, luv ya and goodnight from the West Coast! ^} It can ring - turn night to day It can ring like fire when you lose your way
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

I know everyone is going to focus on the memorial and that Dark Star Jam, but don't skip over that version of Iko Iko. It's one of the highlights of '95, IMHO.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

very nicely put.
user picture

Member for

16 years 9 months
Permalink

for bringing us back to that day. It was sad in may ways...the leader of the band was gone, our way of life was gone...it was never the same again, but at least some ARE keeping it alive.Thanks everyone!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years
Permalink

for playing this one again. When I first heard it back then it helped me to deal with his passing . I always spent the shows on my feet, spinning into the wonderful space that only the Dead could take me to. I injured my ankle two years ago, and have used a crutch to work and get around with, and didn't know when I would be able to dance and spin as i used to. Tonight when listening to this show again I got the inspiration to sit on a revolving stool. I CAN SPIN AND DANCE AGAIN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I was finally able to really experience the music as i used to. spinning away , into the space that only the Dead could take me too, that I haven't full been able to for years. Thank you, Jerry for the inspiration tonight, for the light in the strangest of places, if you look at it right, for my miracle today. Thank you David, for all you have done over the years.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

...my senior year of high school, and I was fortunate to have been catching the dead whenever they came to the NY area for the past four years. I was cooking pasta and my little sister walked into the kitchen and said, "hey, that guitar player you like just died." I knew immediately. I turned off the stove and walked into the living room where my sister was watching MTV, and there was Kurt Loder giving the news. Not sure what to do, I got in my car, lit a cigarette and just started driving the back roads through the woods. I put on 92.3 K-Rock, which was playing live dead all day, and in between songs taking phone calls of people expressing their sadness and gratitude. I parked by a small pond and cried listening to Brokedown Palace. Thank you for playing this memorial which I am hearing for the first time. And I agree that the Dark Star transition from 71 absolutely sings Jerry's spirit... So grateful, everyday.
user picture

Member for

16 years 6 months
Permalink

This is the musical nourishment my soul needs. This particular show is the essence of what it was to have gone along on the ride. It is still delivering or can can deliver cool, clear , beautiful memories of the sunny slopes of long ago.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

you're the best! I'm so grateful for this.-------------------------------(---------@ Hey Pauly! Thanks...For the Good of ALL! xo~xo~xo~xo~safely home, forsure. In lovingkindness, burningsweetlysherbearx~~~ PS 15 years later we still need to remember NOT to lose the meaning of...LOVE. @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ love, love, love...love is all you need, xo @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Love is Real!
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

Is there any way i can hear this via stream or d/l? or will it need to be played again on the DH hour at some time? thank you